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Loading... Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Selfby Claire Tomalin
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. An amazing read - thoroughly engrossing, an extraordinarily complete and researched piece of work but never ever a moment where it was tough going - enthralling and as others have said left you feeling bereft when you had finished it. Genius - indeed have now read others of Tomalin's books - Jane Austen and The Other Woman (Nell - Dicken's mistress) and both intensely human while never sacrificing accuracy and honesty. Thorough, thorough, thorough. Exhaustive, exhaustive, exhaustive. Illuminating, educating, insightful. Narrative, entertaining, if dense. Recommended for those who have intrigue for the age of the Scientific Revolution, English civil war, inflamed religious sparring, stench, gender injustice and lords and commoners of intense political ambition. The layperson may find that it would have been well-served to be edited in length by about one-third. Long, long, long. what a lecherous man - those poor women in his life A wonderful biography that informs as well as entertains. Samuel Pepys is interpreted through his own writings - warts and all. He lived a long life during a tumultous time in English history - the beheading of Charles I, Cromwell and then Restoration. Fascinating polital manoevres, as well as personal dramas. Claire Tomalin is a wonderful biography writer. Samuel Pepys (1633-1703) is the most famous diarist in English letters. From 1660 to 1669, he penned a day-by-day description of Restoration London, with its disasters (the Great Plague of 1665, the Great Fire of 1666), its tumultuous politics and its amazing cultural fervour. Pepys's diary also describes his eager womanizing, as he makes passes, often clumsily, at barmaids and shop girls and the wives of his associates. It is Pepys's intermingling of the public and the private that makes his diary so remarkable. Tomalin (Jane Austin: A Life, etc.) really knows her man, following him closely through some of the great events of English history. As a young government clerk, Pepys allied himself with his cousin Edward Montagu, who turned away from Cromwell to help Charles II become king in 1660, and the Restoration made Pepys's career. Highly organized, intelligent and a savvy political infighter, as Tomalin portrays him, he became a leading navy official and helped build the British navy into a world power. Tomalin also brings us inside Pepys's personal life: his tempestuous marriage, his romantic liaisons, his private, quite negative feelings about King Charles II. Tomalin, biographer of Jane Austen and Charles Dickens, goes beyond Pepys's diary years to examine his entire life. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:11 -0400)
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